Demands on attention and the role of response priming in visual discrimination of feature conjunctions

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Abstract

This study examined how response mapping of features within single- and multiple-feature targets affects decision-based processing and attentional capacity demands. Observers judged the presence or absence of 1 or 2 target features within an object either presented alone or with distractors. Judging the presence of 2 features relative to the less discriminable of these features alone was faster (conjunction benefits) when the task-relevant features differed in discriminability and were consistently mapped to responses. Conjunction benefits were attributed to asynchronous decision priming across attended, task-relevant dimensions. A failure to find conjunction benefits for disjunctive conjunctions was attributed to increased memory demands and variable feature-response mapping for 2- versus single-feature targets. Further, attentional demands were similar between single- and 2-feature targets when response mapping, memory demands, and discriminability of the task-relevant features were equated between targets. Implications of the findings for recent attention models are discussed.

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Fournier, L. R., Herbert, R. J., & Farris, C. (2004). Demands on attention and the role of response priming in visual discrimination of feature conjunctions. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 30(5), 836–852. https://doi.org/10.1037/0096-1523.30.5.836

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